Logan Township police arrest man with $950 in counterfeit bills

— A man shoplifted merchandise from a Wawa Food Market in the township on Aug. 20 and fled in a black sedan with a stolen Pennsylvania license plate. Police identified a suspect and complaints are pending.

— A 30-year-old Logan Township man was charged with robbery, terroristic threats, theft and weapons offenses following a disturbance on Edward Drive on Aug. 21. He was committed to the Salem County Jail in default of $50,000 full-cash bail.

— On Aug. 21, officers investigated a theft complaint at a business on Berkeley Drive in which approximately $20,000 worth of precious metals had been stolen in previous months. A follow-up investigation Aug. 22 resulted in the arrest of a 32-year-old Woodlynne man, Naquon Fisher, on charges of theft and receiving stolen property. He was additionally charged with possession of marijuana after being searched while being arrested. He was served with complaint summonses and released, pending a court appearance.

— On Aug. 21, representatives of Impulse Management, a Wilmington, Del. company, were served with summonses for soliciting without a permit after officers allegedly discovered them selling cologne in the Wawa Food Market parking lot.

— A Gibbstown woman reported on Aug. 22 that her wallet had been stolen while she was shopping at the Acme store on Center Square Road.

— Responding to a report of a burglary in progress, officers arrested Darien Tate, 26, of Bear, Del., who allegedly had entered a warehouse in the 300 block of Heron Drive and had stolen food products. He was charged with burglary, theft, receiving stolen property and defiant trespass.

— James E. Brown, 44, of Philadelphia, was arrested Aug. 24 after allegedly trying to pass counterfeit $100 and $20 bills at Wawa. He left when the bills were refused, but police stopped him a short time later on Interstate 295. He allegedly had $950 in counterfeit bills when he was arrested. He was charged with forgery, passing a forged document and theft and lodged in the Salem County Jail in lieu of $10,000 full-cash bail. Township detectives and the U. S. Secret Service assisted in the investigation.